True Finns MP Tony Halme received a suspended prison sentence of four months and was ordered to
pay fines totalling 80 income-linked "day-fines" - in this case amounting to
EUR 4,480 - as the Helsinki District Court handed down its ruling on Thursday.

The court found Halme guilty of all the offences on the charge-sheet with
the exception of driving under the influence. The court felt that there was
insufficient evidence to support the claim that Halme had driven his car
briefly in a restaurant car park while intoxicated.

The other charges of a firearms violation, behaviour likely to cause danger,
smuggling, possession of imported goods knowing them to be illegal, and drug
use were all upheld, although the court moderated the prosecutor's demands
in some cases.

The court reduced its sentence from the maximum, citing as mitigating
circumstances the fact that Halme was a first offender and that the events
of last July, on which this case was based, had also resulted in the
defendant's lengthy hospitalisation. Halme spent several weeks in a serious
condition after being found unconscious in his Helsinki home. Police had
been called in the early hours of the morning following an incident in which
a military pistol was fired in the apartment. Halme and his wife were
present at the time.

The four-month prison term is suspended and the probationary period lasts
until the end of June next year. The State Prosecutor had demanded a
five-month sentence.

Halme immediately expressed his dissatisfaction with the verdict and
announced he would appeal. He believes he was guilty only of the firearms
violation, to which he also pleaded guilty in court.

Parliament will be able to consider Halme's position only after a
judgement is received from the Court of Appeal, which could take up to a
year.

The process of expelling a Member of Parliament requires a two-thirds
majority of the 200 MPs. The most recent case in which a sitting member was
expelled from the House was in 1993, when Kauko Juhantalo (Centre
Party), a former minister, was voted out by his peers after receiving a
suspended sentence on charges of official misconduct and taking a bribe.

Halme has announced he will not be resigning his seat. The 41-year-old
former professional wrestler and boxer was elected to Parliament in March of
last year in the Helsinki constituency. He received a huge number of votes,
many from disaffected people in the eastern suburbs, and became the third MP
of the populist right-wing True Finns party. The story of his hospitalisation dominated the tabloid headlines last summer.